SORRY FOR THAT. JUST WHEN I THINK I HAVE THE ANSWER SOMTHING ELSE COMES UP THAT DISPUTES IT. I'M NOT VERY COMPUTER LITERATE. SORRY. I WILL TRY TO TELL EVERYTRHING I CAN AT ONE TIME. THE SERIAL NUMBER THE BEST I CAN READ IT 3750 WITH A J FOLLOWING. THE CASTING NUMBER ON THE BLOCK IS 367825 R THE GRILL IS THE TINY HOLE TYPE WITH NO EVIDENCE OF THE HORIZONAL PIECES IN THE PICTURES YOU OR OTHERS SENT IN THE POST. THATS BEEN THE PROBLEM OTHERS SAID IT HAD TO BE A 63 OR NEWER. THE BORE IS 31/8 I WAS WRONG SORRY. I REALLY DON'T WANT TO BE A PAIN I JUST WOULD LIKE THE YEAR AND UNDERSTANDING ABOUT THE GRILL AND WHICH BADGE TO FIND TO REPLACE. THANK YOU AGAIN BRETT
Hugh MacKay said: (quoted from post at 09:53:54 12/08/08) Brett: A 140 block part number should read 367825 R1 or 367825 R2. Just maybe some of them ended in R3 or even just R. There should always be a blank between the 6 digit number and R.
If we agree that your block part number is 367825 R whatever then there is no way tou have 3" pistons and sleeves. The only kit ever made for that block is 3-1/8" piston and sleeve.
I thought you ironed out that serial number about 6 posts ago. I must admit, I've never seen serial numbers on a 140 with blanks other than between number and the J. If your tractor has a 4 digit serial number, excluding the J, it almost has to be a 1958, 1959 or a 1960. At this point, that is as far as I'm prepared to go. Getting info from you has been much like pulling hen's teeth.
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Today's Featured Article - A Lifetime of David Brown - by Samuel Kennedy. I was born in 1950 and reared on my family’s 100 acre farm. It was a fairly typical Northern Ireland farm where the main enterprise was dairying but some pigs, poultry and sheep were also kept. Potatoes were grown for sale and oats were grown to be used for cattle and horse feeding. Up to about 1958 the dairy cows were fed hay with some turnips and after that grass silage was the main winter feed. That same year was the last in which flax was grown on the farm. Flax provided the fibre which w
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